The New Nation - Internet Edition
Myanmar border troops buildup: Govt taking cautious steps: Tuku
State Minister for Home Affairs Shamsul Huq Tuku ruled out reasons for getting worried but said there must be alert in place over the reported Myanmar security buildup on the frontier with Bangladesh.
Talking to reporters at his ministry yesterday, he observed it is the duty of the government to protect the nation's sovereignty and maintain law and order in the country.
"The government is taking measures cautiously in this respect," said the State Minister for Home Affairs about the neighbor's reported military movements, apparently over the maritime-boundary disputes.
The contentions compounded when Bangladesh is leasing out offshore hydrocarbon blocks to two foreign companies-one US and another Irish, for gas exploration within the country's territorial waters in the Bay of Bengal.
On an intelligence report that some Myanmar Rohingyas sneaked into the country and might stage unwarranted incidents, he said the government would deal with the matter lawfully.
On BNP chairperson Khaleda Zia's recent remarks about the breakdown of law-and-order situation, Tuku said her claim is not correct.
The state minister hit back: When she was in power, 10 truckloads of illegal weapons were smuggled into the country and grenade attacks were launched to kill Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and many leaders. Ex-Finance Minister SAMS Kibria and Ahsanullah master MP were brutally killed during her regime.
"After all these dastardly incidents, how she could say this," Tuku said, adding: "we must thank her that she thinks about the nation."
The State Minister said if the opposition leader had raised the matters in parliament, the country would have been benefited.
He also rejected BNP secretary-general Khandaker Delwar Hossain's remarks that the government is trying to repress the opposition by resorting to attacks and filing cases.
Tuku noted that decision has been taken to withdraw a case against Tarique Rahman and another against Barrister Moudud Ahmed MP of BNP considering that the cases were filed with "political motives".
"This process has not exhausted. If more applications for withdrawal of cases are filed, the government will review those," he said in a word of solace for those incarcerated during the interim regime following the 1/11 changeover.